Resistanceby Owen Sheers
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This is no pastoral idyll, nor is it
history writ large in the manner of Raymond Williams' -
"People of The Black
Mountains", but the landscape and its history do figure prominently in
the narrative. At one point during her childhood, Sarah, the
heroine of
this tale meets David Jones, the Welsh poet and artist who
stayed with Eric Gill at
Capel-y-Ffin in the 1920's. Her meetings with him are recounted thus:-
"And
that was when the poet began to tell Sarah his stories, recasting the
land and hills she'd known all her life as the backdrop for his Celtic
myths, for tales of saints and soldiers, of kings and bards. His
stories worked upon the valleys around them like his paintings. he
spoke of places she knew or that she'd hard of before, St Peter's well,
The Abbey, The Cat's Back, St Davids Cell, but the lens of his stories
made them all new again. Some of the stories she'd even heard before,
but never like this, never growing from the very hills of her
birthplace."
Sheers here hints at the perhaps unique relationship which the Welsh people have with their landscape. The hills of Wales are indeed magnificent but they pale into insignificance, at least in topographical terms, when compared with the European Alps or the North American Cascades. Their special gravity and power lies in the fact that every nook and cranny, every fold and crevice, is invested with some human significance. The sum of history and legend which the landscape reveals is almost an externalization of Welsh identity itself. As R.S. Thomas puts it:- "You
cannot live in the present, At least not in Wales,"
Sarah, however, is bound to the valley she lives in by far more tangible ties. There is the instinct for survival which impels her to observe the cycle of the rural calendar and her loyalty to her husband, who goes missing early on in the book when he is called upon to participate in the resistance to the German occupation. By contrast, Albrecht, the German officer sent into the Olchon valley on a secret mission, is suffering from a severe case of 'hiraeth', or longing, both for his home and for his past destroyed by war. Unfortunately, he has no home to go back to. It was destroyed by Allied bombing. His war-weariness manifests itself in a desire to prolong his mission and in the uneasy truce which he and his men establish with the valleys' inhabitants. The precarious situation which develops can only prove temporary. The climactic moments of the novel are reached as both characters have to decide how they will react when the cataclysmic events in the outside world threaten to come crashing in on them. The distant rumbles of war are heard from beyond the Olchon throughout the book. Owen Sheers handles these interruptions skilfully. His references to these events are subtle and sparing... just sufficient to preserve the tension of the main theme. The preparation and training of the the Auxiliary Units of the British Resistance Organization are also woven into the fabric of the narrative; as is their ultimate fate. The book ends with both protagonists facing a stark choice which is really no choice at all. In order to survive they must turn their backs on everything they have known and attempt to find personal salvation in a future that is as uncertain as it is dangerous. Do they succeed? I leave it to you to discover how this final act of 'resistance' plays out . |
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